Your ancestor bought 10 Bitcoin in 2013 for $500 each. They paid $5,000 total. Bitcoin is now worth $100,000 per coin — a gain of $995,000. Under normal tax rules, selling would generate an enormous capital gains bill. But something remarkable happens when those 10 Bitcoin pass to you as inheritance: the entire lifetime gain evaporates. Your cost basis steps up to $1,000,000 — the current market value — and you can sell immediately with zero capital gains tax.
This isn't a tax trick or an obscure loophole. It's been the law since 1921 under Internal Revenue Code § 1014, and it's one of the most powerful wealth-transfer mechanisms available to Bitcoin holders today. Understanding how it works — and more importantly, how to structure your estate to maximize it — could save your heirs hundreds of thousands or even millions of dollars.
This guide covers everything: the mechanics of step-up in basis, how it applies to Bitcoin specifically, the critical gift vs. inheritance decision, community property double step-up, the IRA exception that catches many by surprise, trust structures, and the practical steps heirs should take when they receive Bitcoin.
Section 1: What Is Step-Up in Basis?
To understand the step-up, you need to understand what "basis" means. Your tax basis in an asset is essentially your starting point for calculating capital gains. If you buy 1 Bitcoin for $10,000 and sell it for $80,000, your gain is $70,000 — and you owe capital gains tax on that $70,000. Your basis was $10,000; the $70,000 above that is the taxable gain.
Now here's what happens at death. Under IRC § 1014, when an asset is transferred to an heir at death, the heir's basis is automatically reset to the fair market value of the asset on the date of the decedent's death. Not the original purchase price. Not what the decedent paid. The current market value.
The lifetime capital gain — however large — is permanently extinguished. It doesn't flow through to the heir. It doesn't get taxed at death (except through the estate tax, discussed below). It simply disappears.
| Original purchase | 10 BTC at $500 = $5,000 total |
| Decedent's basis | $5,000 |
| Bitcoin price at death | $100,000 per BTC |
| Estate value of Bitcoin | $1,000,000 |
| Heir's stepped-up basis | $1,000,000 |
| Lifetime gain eliminated | $995,000 |
| Capital gains tax if heir sells at $1M | $0 |
This is not a planning strategy you have to execute — it's automatic. It happens by operation of law whenever assets are transferred at death to heirs. The executor of the estate documents the date-of-death value, the heir inherits with that basis, and the lifetime gain is gone.
Is This a Loophole?
Critics sometimes call the step-up in basis the "angel of death loophole" — implying that it's an unintended escape hatch. It's not. IRC § 1014 was deliberately designed this way. The logic: assets passing through an estate are already subject to the federal estate tax (for large estates). Taxing capital gains again at death would constitute double taxation on the same appreciation. The step-up is meant to prevent that.
For estates below the federal exemption threshold — which is approximately $13,610,000 per individual in 2026 — there's no estate tax at all. Combined with the step-up in basis, heirs of Bitcoin estates under the exemption can inherit and sell with zero federal tax at every level.
Section 2: How Step-Up Works for Bitcoin Specifically
The IRS has classified Bitcoin as property since its 2014 guidance (Notice 2014-21). This classification is the key: because Bitcoin is property, it follows the same Bitcoin inheritance tax rules as stocks, real estate, and other capital assets. The step-up in basis under IRC § 1014 applies fully and completely to Bitcoin.
What Establishes Date-of-Death Fair Market Value?
For stocks, date-of-death value is straightforward: it's the average of the day's high and low trading prices. For Bitcoin, the approach is similar but requires documentation:
- Closing price on the date of death from a major exchange or price aggregator (CoinGecko, CoinMarketCap, CMC Markets) is the most common method
- Average of the day's high and low is also acceptable and may be used in estate accounting
- The executor or estate attorney should document this value with a screenshot or export from a reputable price source, timestamped to the date of death
- For large estates, a formal cryptocurrency valuation from a certified appraiser may be warranted
The estate CPA will then report this value on Form 706 (Federal Estate Tax Return) if required, or simply document it in the estate records if the estate is below the filing threshold.
Multiple Lots and Purchase Dates
Many Bitcoin holders have accumulated Bitcoin over years through multiple purchases at different prices. The cost basis for each lot may be wildly different — some bought at $3,000, others at $30,000, others at $60,000.
When these Bitcoin are inherited, all lots step up to the same date-of-death price, regardless of when they were purchased. This is one of the most valuable aspects of inheritance: a decedent's "underwater" lots (purchased near a peak) and highly appreciated lots alike all reset to the same current value.
Partial Inheritance
If you inherit only a portion of the decedent's Bitcoin — say, you receive 50% of a 10 BTC estate (5 BTC) — your basis is proportional. Your basis per coin is the date-of-death price, and your total basis is 5 BTC × date-of-death price. The percentage split is what matters; the calculation is straightforward.
Bitcoin on Exchanges vs. Self-Custody
If the decedent held Bitcoin on an exchange (Coinbase, Kraken, etc.), the custodian can typically provide a statement of holdings as of a specific date, which the estate can use as documentation. For self-custody wallets, the executor must locate the wallet, document the Bitcoin balance, and establish date-of-death FMV through price records.
Section 3: Step-Up in Basis vs. Carryover Basis — The Gift Problem
One of the most common and costly mistakes in Bitcoin estate planning is confusing inherited Bitcoin with gifted Bitcoin. The tax treatment couldn't be more different.
✅ Inherited Bitcoin
Basis steps up to date-of-death FMV
All lifetime gains permanently eliminated
Heirs can sell at current value with $0 capital gains
Governed by IRC § 1014
❌ Gifted Bitcoin
Carryover basis: recipient gets donor's original cost basis
All lifetime gains transferred to recipient
Recipient owes capital gains on all appreciation when they sell
Governed by IRC § 1015
If you gift 1 Bitcoin that you bought at $1,000 to your child, and Bitcoin is now worth $100,000, your child's basis is $1,000 — not $100,000. When they sell, they owe capital gains tax on $99,000. The same Bitcoin inherited at death would carry a basis of $100,000, generating zero capital gains on an immediate sale.
The Critical Planning Rule: Don't Gift Appreciated Bitcoin
For most Bitcoin holders with significant appreciation, gifting Bitcoin during your lifetime is almost always a worse outcome than simply holding it and letting heirs inherit. The step-up in basis is one of the primary reasons estate attorneys and CPAs consistently advise: if the goal is passing Bitcoin to the next generation, let them inherit it — don't gift it.
When Gifting (and Accepting Carryover Basis) Makes Sense
There are scenarios where gifting Bitcoin — and accepting the carryover basis cost — still makes sense from a planning perspective:
- Estate tax reduction: If your estate is large enough that it faces estate tax, removing Bitcoin through gifting (into a dynasty trust, GRAT, or outright) may reduce the estate tax burden more than the carryover basis costs heirs
- Dynasty trusts: Bitcoin transferred to a dynasty trust leaves your estate but carries the carryover basis. However, it also escapes estate tax for multiple generations — a trade-off that often favors the trust
- Charitable giving: Gifting appreciated Bitcoin to a charity or donor-advised fund eliminates both the capital gains and the gift/estate tax implications
| Bitcoin estate value | $10,000,000 |
| Federal exemption | $5,000,000 (for simplicity) |
| Estate tax on excess ($5M × 40%) | $2,000,000 |
| Cost basis in Bitcoin | $500,000 |
| Gain if heirs inherit and sell (step-up = $0 tax) | $0 |
| Estate tax paid | $2,000,000 |
Dynasty trust alternative: avoid $2M estate tax, but heirs pay ~23.8% LTCG on $9.5M gain = ~$2.26M. In this case, estate tax > capital gains → paying the capital gains is actually cheaper. But dynasty trust offers multi-generational compounding free of estate tax — which often wins long-term. Always model both scenarios with your CPA.
Section 4: Community Property and the Double Step-Up
If you live in one of the nine community property states, you may be eligible for one of the most valuable — and least-known — tax benefits in American law: the double step-up in basis.
What Is Community Property?
In community property states, assets acquired during a marriage with marital funds are owned jointly by both spouses — 50/50 by law. This applies to Bitcoin purchased during the marriage with joint funds. Each spouse is deemed to own half.
The Double Step-Up Mechanism
In a common law state (all other 41 states + DC), when the first spouse dies, only the decedent's 50% of jointly owned assets steps up. The surviving spouse's 50% keeps its original cost basis.
In a community property state, federal tax law (IRC § 1014(b)(6)) provides that both halves of community property step up to fair market value when either spouse dies. The surviving spouse's half — which they didn't actually inherit — also gets the step-up. This is the double step-up.
| Married couple's Bitcoin purchase | 20 BTC at $5,000 during marriage = $100,000 basis |
| Bitcoin price at first spouse's death | $200,000 per BTC |
| Total Bitcoin value at death | 20 BTC × $200,000 = $4,000,000 |
| Common law state result | Only decedent's 10 BTC step up → surviving spouse's 10 BTC keep $50,000 basis |
| Community property state result | ALL 20 BTC step up → surviving spouse's basis = $4,000,000 |
| Capital gains eliminated by double step-up | Additional $1,975,000 in gains eliminated for the surviving spouse's half |
Ensuring Your Bitcoin Qualifies as Community Property
To guarantee your Bitcoin qualifies for the double step-up, it must actually be community property:
- Purchased during the marriage using marital (community) funds
- Not commingled with separate property (assets owned before marriage or received as gifts/inheritances)
- Not subject to a prenuptial or postnuptial agreement that characterizes it as separate property
- For large Bitcoin holdings, consider a community property agreement drafted by an attorney to explicitly characterize the assets
Conversely, if you purchased Bitcoin before marriage or with separate funds, it may be your separate property — and only your half would step up at death, regardless of your state's community property laws.
Section 5: IRAs and Retirement Accounts — The Critical Exception
Here's where many Bitcoin holders are blindsided: the step-up in basis does not apply to Bitcoin held in a traditional IRA, 401(k), or other tax-deferred retirement account. This is a major exception with enormous implications for estate planning.
Why No Step-Up in IRAs?
The step-up in basis eliminates capital gains that have already been subject to the economic burden of potential taxation. But traditional IRA and 401(k) contributions were made pre-tax — the money went in without being taxed, and it has never been subject to income tax. All distributions from these accounts are treated as ordinary income, not capital gains. The step-up, which applies to capital gains, simply doesn't apply in this context.
❌ Traditional Bitcoin IRA
No step-up — heirs owe ordinary income tax on all distributions
Heirs must deplete within 10 years (SECURE Act)
Tax rate: up to 37% federal + state income tax
Potentially the worst tax outcome for Bitcoin inheritance
✅ Bitcoin Roth IRA
No step-up needed — all distributions are tax-free
Heirs must deplete within 10 years (SECURE Act)
Tax rate: 0% (contributions already taxed)
One of the best vehicles for passing Bitcoin tax-efficiently
The Inherited IRA Problem
Consider a Bitcoin holder with a traditional self-directed IRA containing 10 BTC, purchased when Bitcoin was $5,000 per coin. Bitcoin is now worth $200,000 per coin. Total IRA value: $2,000,000.
When this person dies and leaves the IRA to their child, the child faces a brutal tax situation:
- The child cannot let the IRA grow indefinitely — under the SECURE Act (2019), non-spouse heirs must fully deplete inherited IRAs within 10 years
- Every dollar distributed is ordinary income — taxed at up to 37% federal, plus state income tax
- If the Bitcoin appreciates further during the 10-year period, the tax burden grows
- There is no step-up, no capital gains rate, no exemption — just ordinary income on the full $2,000,000
At a 32-37% marginal rate, the child could owe $640,000-$740,000 in federal income tax alone on that $2,000,000 inheritance — before state taxes.
Planning Implications
The general hierarchy for Bitcoin inheritance tax efficiency:
- Best: Direct self-custody (or revocable trust) — full step-up, zero capital gains for heirs
- Strong: Bitcoin Roth IRA — no step-up but no tax on distributions; heirs inherit tax-free
- Caution: Bitcoin Traditional IRA — no step-up; all distributions are ordinary income to heirs
Section 6: Trust and Estate Planning for Maximum Step-Up Benefits
Trusts are central to sophisticated Bitcoin estate planning, but not all trusts preserve the step-up in basis. Understanding how different trust structures interact with the step-up is essential for structuring your estate correctly.
The Simplest Strategy: Revocable Trust
For most Bitcoin holders who want to preserve the step-up benefit while ensuring smooth transfer at death, the revocable living trust is the simplest and most effective vehicle. Because you maintain control and beneficial ownership during your lifetime, the Bitcoin is included in your taxable estate — meaning it gets the full step-up at death. Your heirs inherit through the trust without probate, with a fully stepped-up basis.
Dynasty Trust: Accepting the Trade-Off
A dynasty trust is designed to hold assets for multiple generations, avoiding estate tax each time assets would otherwise pass from one generation to the next. Bitcoin transferred into a dynasty trust loses its step-up opportunity for each future generation — but it also escapes estate tax assessment at each generation. For Bitcoin holders with multi-generational ambitions, the estate tax savings over 50-100 years typically dwarf the cost of foregone step-ups. This is a trade-off that requires careful modeling with an estate attorney.
Section 7: Practical Steps for Heirs Who Inherit Bitcoin
If you've recently inherited Bitcoin — or expect to — here are the concrete steps you need to take to document and claim your stepped-up basis:
-
Document Date-of-Death Fair Market Value
Get the exact date of death and look up the Bitcoin price on that date from CoinGecko, CoinMarketCap, or a similar reputable source. Screenshot it. Export the data. This is your stepped-up basis anchor. -
Obtain Documentation from the Estate
The estate attorney or CPA should provide you with a formal statement of your inherited Bitcoin's date-of-death value. If the estate filed Form 706 (federal estate tax return), the valuations used there establish your basis. If no return was filed, the estate documentation should still include a valuation. -
Transfer Bitcoin to Your Own Wallet or Account
Work with the estate executor to transfer the Bitcoin from the decedent's wallet or exchange account to your own. For exchange accounts, this typically requires submitting a death certificate and letters testamentary. For self-custody, the executor must access the wallet and facilitate the transfer. -
Record Your Basis in Crypto Tax Software
Enter your inherited Bitcoin into crypto tax software (Koinly, CoinTracker, TaxBit) with the date of death as the acquisition date and date-of-death FMV as your cost basis. Mark it as "inherited" — most platforms have this option, which also affects how holding period is calculated. -
Report Correctly When You Sell
When you eventually sell, report the sale on Form 8949 (Sales and Other Dispositions of Capital Assets). Your cost basis is the stepped-up amount. Your gain is sale price minus stepped-up basis. For inherited property, your holding period is automatically treated as long-term (more than one year), regardless of how long you actually held it — meaning you qualify for long-term capital gains rates even if you sell the day after inheriting.
What If the Estate Didn't Document FMV?
This happens more often than it should, especially with small estates or sudden deaths where proper estate administration wasn't completed. If you have no formal documentation:
- Use historical price data from CoinGecko or CoinMarketCap for the exact date of death — this data is publicly available and court-accepted
- Document the source, the date, and the specific price used in your records
- Consider having a CPA write a brief memo establishing the valuation methodology for your files
- If the estate is audited, having contemporaneous documentation (even reconstructed from public data) is far better than no documentation
Section 8: 2026 Estate Tax Considerations and Legislative Risk
Estate tax law is in active flux in 2026. The federal estate tax exemption — currently at historically elevated levels following the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017 — has been subject to ongoing legislative debates. The exemption is estimated at approximately $13,610,000 per individual (or roughly $27,220,000 for married couples using portability) for 2026, but these figures are subject to change. Consult current counsel for the most up-to-date thresholds applicable to your situation.
The "Angel of Death Loophole" Debate
The step-up in basis has been a recurring target for legislators who view it as a mechanism that disproportionately benefits the wealthy. Various proposals have sought to:
- Replace the step-up with carryover basis at death
- Tax unrealized gains at death as a deemed sale event
- Limit the step-up to a fixed dollar amount
None of these proposals have become law as of the publication of this guide (February 2026). The step-up in basis under IRC § 1014 remains fully in effect. However, Bitcoin holders with large estates should work with estate attorneys who monitor legislative developments and can adjust strategies if law changes.
The Estate Tax + Step-Up Interaction for Taxable Estates
Even for estates large enough to owe federal estate tax, the step-up still applies. The estate tax is calculated on the estate's total value and paid from the estate. But heirs still receive their inherited Bitcoin with a stepped-up basis — meaning they can sell the inherited Bitcoin with zero additional capital gains tax, even after the estate paid estate tax on the same assets.
This is the core of why the two taxes work together rather than compounding. The estate tax is the price for passing wealth at death; the step-up eliminates capital gains on the same passage. For very large Bitcoin estates, this means: plan to minimize estate tax (through exemptions, GRATs, dynasty trusts, charitable vehicles), but know that whatever Bitcoin does pass to heirs directly will arrive with a clean, stepped-up basis.
Section 9: Frequently Asked Questions
When you inherit Bitcoin, your tax cost basis is stepped up to the fair market value of Bitcoin on the date of the decedent's death, under IRC § 1014. All capital gains accumulated during the decedent's lifetime are permanently eliminated. If you then sell the inherited Bitcoin at its current market price (equal to date-of-death value), you owe zero capital gains tax. This applies to all directly-held Bitcoin — self-custody, on exchanges, or held in revocable trusts — but not to Bitcoin in traditional IRAs or 401(k)s.
If you inherited Bitcoin directly (not through a traditional IRA or 401k), your basis is stepped up to the date-of-death fair market value. If you sell at or near that price, you owe little to no capital gains tax. If the price has risen since you inherited it, you owe long-term capital gains tax only on the appreciation after the date of death — not on any gains accumulated during the decedent's lifetime. Note that inherited property automatically qualifies for long-term capital gains rates regardless of how long you've held it since inheriting.
Gifted Bitcoin carries the donor's original cost basis (carryover basis), not a stepped-up basis. This is significantly less favorable than inherited Bitcoin. If someone gifts you Bitcoin they bought at $1,000 per coin and it's now worth $100,000, your basis is still $1,000 — meaning you'll owe capital gains on $99,000 of appreciation per coin when you sell. This is why estate planners generally advise against gifting highly appreciated Bitcoin during the donor's lifetime if the goal is to transfer it to the next generation — the step-up at death is far more tax-efficient.
No. The step-up in basis does NOT apply to Bitcoin held in a traditional IRA or 401(k). These accounts have never been subject to income tax, so all distributions — including to heirs — are treated as ordinary income, taxed at up to 37% federal rates. Heirs who inherit a traditional Bitcoin IRA must fully deplete it within 10 years (under the SECURE Act), paying ordinary income tax on every dollar distributed. Bitcoin Roth IRAs are an exception: while the step-up still doesn't apply, distributions from inherited Roth IRAs are generally tax-free, since contributions were already taxed.
Your inherited Bitcoin's cost basis equals the fair market value of Bitcoin on the exact date of the decedent's death. The estate executor or attorney should document this using historical price data from sources like CoinGecko or CoinMarketCap — typically using the closing price or average of the day's high and low. If you inherit a fraction of the decedent's total Bitcoin (say, 40% of their holdings), your basis is 40% of the total date-of-death value, applied proportionally to the coins you received. Enter this as your cost basis in crypto tax software, with the date of death as your acquisition date.
The federal step-up in basis under IRC § 1014 applies uniformly in all 50 states — it's a federal law. However, your state of residence affects how powerful the step-up is. Residents of the 9 community property states (AZ, CA, ID, LA, NM, NV, TX, WA, WI) may qualify for a double step-up in basis, where both spouses' shares of community property step up to fair market value when the first spouse dies. In common law states (the other 41 states + DC), only the decedent's half of jointly owned assets steps up. Some states also have their own estate taxes with different exemption thresholds, which affect overall inheritance planning but not the federal step-up mechanism.
It depends on the type of trust. Bitcoin in a revocable living trust steps up at death because the grantor retains beneficial ownership and the assets are included in the taxable estate. Irrevocable grantor trusts (like IDGTs) may also qualify for the step-up if properly structured to be included in the estate at death. However, irrevocable non-grantor trusts generally don't provide a step-up — the trust is a separate taxpayer, and assets don't get a new basis when they pass to beneficiaries. Dynasty trusts also forgo the step-up at each generation transfer, though they gain multigenerational estate tax savings in exchange.
The step-up in basis under IRC § 1014 has been the law since 1921 and has survived numerous legislative attempts to repeal or modify it. As of February 2026, it remains fully in effect. Legislative proposals to replace the step-up with carryover basis or a deemed-sale event at death have periodically emerged in Congress but have not passed. If you're concerned about potential changes, your estate attorney can structure your estate to be somewhat agnostic to step-up changes — for example, emphasizing Roth accounts (tax-free regardless of capital gains rules) and charitable vehicles. But as of now, the step-up is settled law, not a threatened exception.
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